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I have a really bad cough and I'm not sure how to prevent me from coughing like every 30 seconds... I use medicine but I'm wondering if there is any other way to prevent it?

2007-02-07 12:33:40 · 5 answers · asked by arepuglover93 1 in Health Diseases & Conditions Other - Diseases

5 answers

you gotta open up your airways, try running hot water in a sink and put a towel over your head and sink and inhale the steam. you can also use a humidifier while you sleep. drink lots of water also.

2007-02-07 12:37:19 · answer #1 · answered by A.J. 4 · 0 0

Have you gone to the DOCTOR? Cause if you havent', i'm just wondering how long have you had this going on? If it's been going on for a long time, without a cold, then you might seriously need to see a doctor, because it could be TB. Have a skin test done, see what results...

IF it's just happened recently, try halls, or things of that nature to keep your throat moist. Also try a cup of warm water, as warm as you can get it, and put salt in it, not too much but you know moderate. mix it, and gargle with it.. do not drink it, just GARGLE.. and spit out.. do it a few times. That's a home remedy that has been used for centuries by the mexican culture. It actually kills germs, and bacteria and soothes sore throats, works when you have a nagging cough caused by a cold too....

Also, try google search - cough suppresents, home and or home remedies and it can give you more ideas.. :)

2007-02-07 12:46:32 · answer #2 · answered by MOON13 3 · 0 0

NewsTarget.com printable article
Originally published November 24 2004
Theobromine, a compound in chocolate, works as effective cough medicine
by Mike Adams

Chocolate (cocoa) is a rainforest herb, after all. It also has anti-cancer properties.

Researchers in the UK gave 10 healthy volunteers tablets which contained either theobromine, found in cocoa, codeine, the cough suppressant, or a placebo. The volunteers were told to inhale a gas containing capsaicin, a derivative of chili peppers, which induces coughing. The volunteers who took theobromine needed one third more capsules to produce coughing than those who took codeine.

Theobromine, which has no side effects, acts on the sensory nerve endings at the vagus nerve, which runs through the airways in the lungs to the brain. Codeine was shown to be only marginally more effective than the placebo.

* An ingredient in chocolate may actually be a more effective cough medicine than traditional remedies, a new study suggests.
* And not only that, the UK-based research showed that the cocoa-derived compound had none of the side effects associated with standard drug treatments for persistent coughs.
* "These sorts of coughs, often lasting for weeks after a viral infection, can be difficult to treat, especially since it is not possible to give large doses of opiate-based medication to patients due to the side effects," says Peter Barnes, professor of thoracic medicine at Imperial College London, UK, who led the study.
* Barnes and colleagues gave 10 healthy volunteers tablets containing: theobromine, a constituent of cocoa or; codeine, the cough suppressant against which other drugs are measured or; a placebo.
* The volunteers were then asked to inhale a gas containing capsaicin - a derivative of chilli peppers - which induces coughing and is used as an indicator to test the effectiveness of cough medicines.
* Dame Helena Shovelton, chief executive of the British Lung Foundation, says: "The results of this research sound very promising.
* Persistent coughing often affects lung disease patients so this could be a progressive step in treating it."
* But she advises that "patients to speak to their family doctor before changing their medication or treating their cough with chocolate", as tempting as that may be.
* This is not true of codeine, which is a narcotic and lists drowsiness and constipation among its negative effects.
* The researchers believe theobromine acts on the sensory nerve endings of the vagus nerve, which runs through the airways in the lungs to the brain.
* The team explored their hypothesis by looking at theobromine's action on the vagus nerve in separate experiments involving guinea pigs and excised human trachea tissue.

2007-02-07 12:37:40 · answer #3 · answered by mission_viejo_california 2 · 0 0

Try a humidifier as well as a hot shower. That always seems to work for me. The steam helps!

2007-02-07 12:37:25 · answer #4 · answered by orangeblossoms83 2 · 0 0

heat up water, and put lemon and honey in it, it might sound weird but it sooths your through and u probably will stop coughing

2007-02-07 12:38:08 · answer #5 · answered by frogpuppie 1 · 0 0

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